Menu

Month: March 2007

An Iranian diplomat has said the Royal Navy personnel held by Iran could face legal action for violating international law.

Iran’s ambassador to Russia said the case of the 15 British sailors and marines had entered a legal phase but denied that he had earlier said the sailors could be put on trial, the country’s official news agency IRNA reports.

Gholam-Reza Ansari made his comments to Russian television Vesti-24 and was quoted by IRNA on its website as saying, "the case of the detention of British sailors has taken on a judicial form."

To me, Queers For Palestine seems like an oxymoron of sorts. I mean, why support a state that is so notoriously anti-gay; Anti-gay in the chop off your head or stone you kind of way. It’s so bad that a group of Arab lesbians had to hold a conference in Israel because of fear of holding it elsewhere. Meryl Yourish is has more on this.

In what is becoming a trend among conservative Christians in the United States, girls as young as nine are pledging to their fathers to remain virgins until they wed, in elaborate ceremonies dubbed "Purity Balls."

The gala affairs are intended to celebrate the father-daughter relationship.

The highlight is when the fathers and daughters exchange vows, with dad signing a covenant to protect his daughter’s chastity by living an unblemished life and the daughter promising not to have sex until marriage.

Many fathers at the ceremonies also slip "purity rings" around the finger of their misty-eyed daughters or offer them "chastity bracelets" and other jewelry that the girls can entrust to their husbands on their wedding night.

Two new books bought today. Alan Dershowitz’ The Case for Peace and Bernard Lewis’ What went wrong?. Dershowitz’ book is a sequel of sorts to The Case for Israel which I read in January and can’t speak highly enough of. The Case for Peace contains praises from former US President Bill Clinton, the currently comatose Ariel Sharon, and Amos Oz if that’s enough to convince you.